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Digitised spirography as an evaluation tool for intention tremor in multiple sclerosis

Digitised spirography as an evaluation tool for intention tremor in multiple sclerosis
Digitised spirography as an evaluation tool for intention tremor in multiple sclerosis
This study investigated validity and reliability of digitised circle and square spiral drawing for quantifying intention tremor severity and related disability in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). The tremor amplitude was measured as the standard deviation of the drawing velocity of the arm in the radial and tangential direction for circle spiral drawing, and in the horizontal and vertical direction for square spiral drawing. Results were compared with those of MS patients without tremor and healthy controls, and correlated with clinical assessments of tremor severity and arm functionality including Fahn's tremor rating scale, Test d’Evaluation des Membres supérieurs des Personnes Agées (TEMPA) and the nine-hole-peg test to examine validity. Comparison of patient's performance between four repeated trials examined short-term test-retest reliability.
All digitised spirography variables discriminated between the MS-tremor and both MS-no-tremor and healthy control groups. Validity was also shown by high spearman correlation coefficients between spirography variables and clinical ratings. Tremor appeared to be most profound in the radial and vertical direction during circle and square spiral drawing, respectively. The consistency and high correlations between four repeated executions indicated short-term test-retest reliability.
We conclude that the digitised spirography provide a useful instrumentation for quantifying MS intention tremor.
intention tremor, multiple sclerosis, spirography, drawing, arm
0165-0270
309-316
Feys, P.
a75d153d-64f1-406a-98ce-d40b36ce14bb
Helsen, W.
3cf5191c-5c65-4de5-901e-561d9cd053ca
Prinsmel, A.
fbf821c3-bf40-4aaa-bbd4-4efad37f2f92
Ilsbroukx, S.
6ce2edee-0238-4561-823e-60104cad9644
Wang, S.
8bce5bdb-420c-4b22-b009-8f4ce1febaa8
Liu, X.
878efcac-76c6-4ca0-8f4a-425f1e9abdac
Feys, P.
a75d153d-64f1-406a-98ce-d40b36ce14bb
Helsen, W.
3cf5191c-5c65-4de5-901e-561d9cd053ca
Prinsmel, A.
fbf821c3-bf40-4aaa-bbd4-4efad37f2f92
Ilsbroukx, S.
6ce2edee-0238-4561-823e-60104cad9644
Wang, S.
8bce5bdb-420c-4b22-b009-8f4ce1febaa8
Liu, X.
878efcac-76c6-4ca0-8f4a-425f1e9abdac

Feys, P., Helsen, W., Prinsmel, A., Ilsbroukx, S., Wang, S. and Liu, X. (2007) Digitised spirography as an evaluation tool for intention tremor in multiple sclerosis. Journal of Neuroscience Methods, 160 (2), 309-316. (doi:10.1016/j.jneumeth.2006.09.019).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study investigated validity and reliability of digitised circle and square spiral drawing for quantifying intention tremor severity and related disability in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). The tremor amplitude was measured as the standard deviation of the drawing velocity of the arm in the radial and tangential direction for circle spiral drawing, and in the horizontal and vertical direction for square spiral drawing. Results were compared with those of MS patients without tremor and healthy controls, and correlated with clinical assessments of tremor severity and arm functionality including Fahn's tremor rating scale, Test d’Evaluation des Membres supérieurs des Personnes Agées (TEMPA) and the nine-hole-peg test to examine validity. Comparison of patient's performance between four repeated trials examined short-term test-retest reliability.
All digitised spirography variables discriminated between the MS-tremor and both MS-no-tremor and healthy control groups. Validity was also shown by high spearman correlation coefficients between spirography variables and clinical ratings. Tremor appeared to be most profound in the radial and vertical direction during circle and square spiral drawing, respectively. The consistency and high correlations between four repeated executions indicated short-term test-retest reliability.
We conclude that the digitised spirography provide a useful instrumentation for quantifying MS intention tremor.

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More information

Published date: 15 March 2007
Keywords: intention tremor, multiple sclerosis, spirography, drawing, arm
Organisations: Human Sciences Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 49593
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/49593
ISSN: 0165-0270
PURE UUID: 4e338cfc-5336-47ef-8354-75ce3c6844d7

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Date deposited: 20 Nov 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:57

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Contributors

Author: P. Feys
Author: W. Helsen
Author: A. Prinsmel
Author: S. Ilsbroukx
Author: S. Wang
Author: X. Liu

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